In the late nineties, when I first began to visualize a charting of Southern Soul music, my overriding motive was to correct what I perceived to be a grievous wrong. When I searched the Internet for information on the great musicians I heard on radio stations on my trips through the South, I could find nothing about them. I was able to find loads of information on blues and soul artists up to about the 1980's, but anything more contemporary was still a dark continent. It was as if a cultural curtain had dropped and any information about contemporary southern soul and blues strictly forbidden. Even "southern soul" was a suspect and tentative term, used mainly as an adjective to describe older artists geographically tied to the Deep South.
To help right that wrong, I went about constructing a Top 100 chart of the best Southern Soul artists from the 90's to the present (at that time, early 00's), and I profiled those performers in "artist guides." Johnnie Taylor was the #1 artist on the chart for the bulk of those years, although Peggy Scott-Adams, Ronnie Lovejoy and Tyrone Davis enjoyed brief stints.
Then, in 2010, I began publishing a new chart to reflect the new artists and new realities of southern soul music: 21st Century Southern Soul. Sir Charles Jones, aka "the king of southern soul," dominated the #1 spot exclusively throughout the decade.
Now in 2020 it's time, once again, to catch up with the new songs and artists in southern soul music with a chart called The New Generation.
©2005-2024 SouthernSoulRnB.com
All material--written or visual--on this website is copyrighted and the exclusive property of SouthernSoulRnB.com, LLC. Any use or reproduction of the material outside the website is strictly forbidden, unless expressly authorized by SouthernSoulRnB.com. (Material up to 300 words may be quoted without permission if "Daddy B. Nice's Southern Soul RnB.com" is listed as the source and a link to http://www.southernsoulrnb.com/ is provided.)